Carpentry

How to Mount a TV on Plaster Walls in Pre-War NYC Apartments

7 min read HandyAce Team

Why Pre-War Walls Are Different

If your apartment building was built before about 1950, your walls aren't drywall. They're plaster over wood lath — thin wooden strips nailed to the studs, with two coats of plaster troweled on top.

This matters because:

A 50-pound TV mounted into plaster the wrong way can fail months later, taking a chunk of wall with it. Here's how to do it right.

Step 1: Find the Studs

Studs are the structural wood (or sometimes steel) inside the wall. They're what your mount needs to grab onto.

In most NYC pre-war apartments, studs are spaced 16 inches apart but it's not guaranteed — older buildings can be 12-24 inches.

Step 2: Pick the Right Mount and Hardware

Buy a fixed or tilting mount rated for at least 1.5x your TV weight. Skip full-motion mounts on plaster — the leverage is brutal on old walls.

For hardware, you have two paths:

Path A — Hit the studs (preferred)

Use the lag bolts that came with the mount, drilled directly into studs. This is by far the strongest method.

Path B — Plaster anchors (only if you can't hit studs)

If your studs don't line up with the mount, you need toggle bolts rated for plaster and lath — specifically:

A pair of Snaptoggles can hold 250+ pounds in plaster when installed correctly.

Step 3: Drill Without Cracking Plaster

This is where most DIYers ruin a wall.

  • Mark your hole with a pencil

  • Cover the spot with a piece of masking tape — this reduces vibration cracking

  • Use a masonry or carbide-tipped bit, NOT a regular wood bit

  • Drill slowly on low speed

  • Start with a small pilot hole (1/8 inch), then step up
  • If you hit something extremely hard halfway through — that's the lath, keep going. If it suddenly gives way — you've punched through into empty air, which is fine.

    Step 4: Mount the Bracket

  • Hold the mount level against the wall — get a friend to help

  • Mark all anchor points through the holes in the mount

  • Drill each hole using the technique above

  • Install anchors (if using) or drive lag bolts directly into studs

  • Tighten the mount snug, but don't over-torque or you'll crack the plaster face
  • Step 5: Hang the TV

    Have two people for this. Lift the TV onto the mount hooks, then tighten the locking screws underneath. Test by gently pulling outward — it shouldn't budge.

    Pro Tips From NYC Pros

    When to Call HandyAce

    Mounting a TV in a pre-war NYC apartment is one of our most-requested jobs. We'll:

    Most TV installs take under an hour and we carry the right mounts and anchors with us. Get in touch and we'll send a quote based on your TV size and wall type.

    Need a Hand?

    Our licensed team handles jobs big and small across all 5 NYC boroughs.

    Get a Free Quote